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Comment I would love to get a grant like that (Score 2) 532

Who wouldn't want a grant like that? There's absolutely no possibility of accountability. The notions are so vague and there's so many different views, even among the same religion, about what an afterlife would be like that you can't really be proven wrong. Basically, they weaseled their way into $5 mill with no chance of being asked for results.

Comment Re:Common sense (Score 1) 505

The rational for the creation of the Department of Energy was to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign energy supplies. The thing is, since the establishment of the Department of Energy, the U.S. has become significantly more dependent on foreign energy supplies. .

Yeah, if by foreign supplies you mean Canada and Mexico. People seem to think the USA buys a lot of oil from the middle east but this just isn't true. Nearly all of the oil America uses comes from North America, Oil is fungible though, so it doesn't matter all that much where the oil we Americans are using comes from since oil is bought and sold on the global market and prices are dictated by global supply and demand. Cheap natural gas provides an alternative to compete with oil and that is bound to be a good thing, not to mention it's also cleaner.

Sadly, I doubt that'll deter the eco-freakos. My little town of Erie, Colorado makes a lot of money from gas. A group called "Erie Rising" has been harrassing the town constantly over fracking. The thing that gets me is most of this group's membership and funding doesn't come from Erie. It's biggest donors seem to be in New York and Pennsylvania. I wish they'd leave my little town alone.

Submission + - Greenland ice sheet not going anywhere in a hurry....stop building that Ark. (theregister.co.uk) 1

bricko writes: "Doom-laden predictions that the seas are set to rise by a metre or more this century due to the melting of the Greenland ice sheet are well off the mark, a team of scientists has announced in a new study of the matter.

According to Kjaer and his colleagues, the scenarios which predict huge melting and massive resultant sea-level rises are flawed because they rely on a very limited amount of information spanning just a few recent years: the Greenland ice has only been intensively studied for a relatively short period of time. This has led scientists to assume that rapid melting seen lately will carry on uninterrupted, pouring gigatonnes of water into the world's oceans and inundating coastal areas around the planet.

But this is mistaken: it now emerges that periods of rapid melting like the one just seen have happened in the past — but then, rather than continuing, the apparently runaway melting simply stopped.

A related study examining old aerial photos of the Greenland ice was published in June, revealing that in the 1930s the glaciers there were retreating even faster than they are today: but again, the process subsequently stopped on its own. ®

In otherwords.....oops."

The Media

Submission + - Today Everybody's a Fact Checker

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "David Zweig writes that since the beginning of the republic politicians have resorted to half-truths and bald-faced lies and while tenacious reporters and informed citizens have tracked these falsehoods over the years, until now they've lacked the interconnectivity and real-time capabilities of the Web to amplify their findings. Today sites like the Washington Post's Fact-Check column and the Annenberg Foundation Public Policy Center's FactCheck.org, which draws hundreds of thousands of unique visitors each month, often provide fodder for public fascination with fact-checking and in a meta fact-check, Snopes, the grandaddy of online truth-telling, clarifies rumors on everything from Rush Limbaugh's draft avoidance to the notion that Lady Gaga's perfume contains blood and semen (not true). But perhaps the biggest and easiest target for IEEs (Internet Error Exposers) are period piece television shows and films where blogs like Prochronisms, look "at historical changes in language by algorithmically checking historical TV shows and movies" utilizing tools like Google Ngram viewer to bust Mad Men for example for using terms or phrases in dialogue didn't yet exist yet like an actress getting a "callback," a term that wasn't popularized until years after the show's depicted era. Then there's sports where Charley Casserly, a member of the NFL's competition committee, says he voted against releasing All-22 footage because he worried that if fans had access, it would open players and teams up to a level of criticism far beyond the current hum of talk radio. "Perhaps the masses don't care about inaccuracies. Many Democrats and Republicans alike will believe what they want and ignore or disregard the truth," writes Zweig. "But there are enough experts within a variety of fields rabidly conversing about errors that content-creators—be they politicians, journalists, or filmmakers—are now forced to be on their toes in a way they never have been before. And that's a good thing.""
Android

Submission + - RIM CEO says company 'seriously' considered switch to Android (bgr.com)

zacharye writes: RIM CEO Thorsten Heins’s interview with the Telegraph on Thursday made headlines for his admission that the company can’t keep up with Apple and Samsung without outside help. But there’s another interesting nugget buried within the interview that didn’t get quite as much attention: Heins says that RIM took a long, hard look at migrating to Android before deciding to plow forward with BlackBerry 10...
Printer

Submission + - MIT students reveal PopFab, a 3D printer that fits inside a briefcase (gizmag.com) 1

cylonlover writes: There are plenty of different 3D printers to choose from these days, from the popular Makerbot Thing-O-Matic to the budget-priced Solidoodle. These all have one drawback however in that they aren't exactly portable. Most need to be disassembled to be moved and even the fully-assembled Cubify printer isn't really built for travel. But now, two MIT students have developed the PopFab, a machine that does 3D printing and more, all while fitting inside a small suitcase. With different heads, the machine could also be used for milling, vinyl cutting, drawing, and much more, to create a wide variety of objects. The creators have also tested its portability by traveling with it as a carry-on suitcase to Saudi Arabia, Germany, and within the U.S.

Comment Relevance (Score 1) 1010

As a college student myself (and one who is not particularly good at math), I know full and well that math is necessary and, indeed, some algebra is necessary but at some point the issue of relevance must come into play. I'm a computer technician by trade, not a programmer, a technician. I aim to go into system administration. I might need the occasional bits of basic algebra, but thus far, I have yet to encounter any scenario where I've wished I had a better grasp of logarithmic equations.

The article suggest that perhaps applied uses of mathematics and statistics might be more useful and I totally agree with that assertion. There are plenty of good jobs out there where you don't need to know polynomial equations. I'm not convinced that every Kindergarten teacher needs to know matrices or that every real estate agent needs a firm grasp of conics. I do feel that many American's would benefit from more statistics in lieu of more algebra. Like many Americans, I would much rather be able to understand how variations in market volatility might affect my return on investment than devote more time to inverse functions.

Comment Re:Yawn (Score 1) 291

Wake me when the US voting system actually gives a third party a chance to play any role.

Wake me up when 3rd parties aren't run by crazy people more concerned with ideology than governing. The wonderful thing about our plurality based system is that it pretty much guarantees there will be two parties that have to spend most of their efforts appealing to moderate voters while radicals are shut out. The electoral college reinforces this since the most moderate voters in the most moderate states can make or break an election. I'd much rather have two centrist parties fight for a majority than see a moderate party end up with a plurality and having to enter into a coalition government with a communist or neofascist party. Multiparty systems can leave radical parties that have relatively few seats with far more power than is healthy simply because they have enough to sway the balance of power.

America's governing system was established with a bias towards moderation and divided in a way that promotes gridlock. A party that has the House may not have the Senate or Presidency. A party that has all three might be obstructed if they don't have 60/100 votes in the Senate by a minority party's filibuster. The Supreme Court can reign in Congressional overstep and is largely immune to sudden shifts in public opinion. Even if a party has all of the federal government under its thumb it still is limited by Constitutional protections and in addition to the horizontal division of power our government has vertical divisions of power (that is the 10th Amendment and other provisions divide power between the federal and state governments). Most states have similar checks and balances and have to have cooperation with local and regional governments on some matters.

This gridlock gets criticized because it makes it hard to get something done by the mere whims of a majority but that is why America has done so well. Radical changes are impossible and our government is more evolutionary than revolutionary. In parliamentary systems a Prime Minister will seldom have any trouble getting whatever he wants through parliament since he has a majority or at least a majority coalition and party discipline is strict because breaking with your party can lead to a disillusion of parliament. In America, members of congress will periodically break with their party and having a majority may procedurally ensure a party can block whatever it doesn't want (for example, the House Rules Committee is always dominated by the majority and can put procedural limits on an unwanted bill to make it impossible to pass), but a majority cannot always get everything it wants.

In my view the lack of 3rd parties is probably a plus since it promotes stability. If we could fix anything about our electoral system, I'd want US House and State Legislative seats to be drawn by independent bodies with strict rules and for term limits to be applied to members of Congress. Gerrymandering means most members of congress are in seats virtually guaranteed to be "safe" and can only be defeated by being primaried by a member of their own party who claims they aren't representing the party accurately enough. It also makes many members of Congress and state legislatures virtually immune to public scrutiny since most of them simply cannot be defeated and it can leave elected officials without clear communities of interest to represent. Term limits would guarantee someone won't be endlessly re-elected simply by virtue of name recognition and will ensure seniority doesn't grant uncompetitive parts of the country such ridiculous amounts of power. We are one of the few countries in the world that uses a winner take all system and still allows for politicians to pick their own voters. Reform is slowly emerging though. Arizona, Iowa, New Jersey and a few other states put independent commissions in charge though many are still prone to partisan agendas. In 2008 California, a state that is perhaps one of the least competitive in the nation due to gerrymandering, saw reform as voters passed an initiative to draw legislative seats with a bi-partisan panel and in 2010 voters expanded that panel's power to drawing US House seats. In Florida in 2010 voters passed initiatives to put strict rules on the way their legislature redraws state legislative and US House seats. While the shape of US House and State Legislative seats may not seem important it is and since this is a year ending in a 1 the states are currently fighting over how to reshape their seats. About the only states that have much hope of reform are states where voters can amend their state constitutions by initiative since legislatures will never accept such a curtailment of their own power but I think things will go better this year than in previous decades since Florida and California, both high population states, will finally draw somewhat fair maps.

Comment Re:Texas board sides with Science? (Score 1) 626

Nah, the board just evolved. As the electorate gets more worried about the future of their kids who might not be able to compete in the global marketplace, the board members who adopted a more pro-science stance prospered..

Somehow I doubt a differing view held by some on the theory of evolution has all that much economic impact.

Comment Re:If the almighty buck is the only thing... (Score 1) 239

Some things need learning. Like finding the structure of the DNA, develop self-assembled structures, optimize carbon nanotube growth, develop drugs that can cross the BBB, design multicore CPUs, discover the inner workings of mitochondria etc.

Yes, and nobody is suggesting everybody drop out, just those who already have ideas and are participating in this experiment.

Comment Re:Perhaps I'm a bit naive, but... (Score 1) 239

Part of the problem with the world today is that too many things are viewed only through the lens of "is it useful in business".

I would say quite the opposite. I think colleges these days still focus on electives and simply being present there for 4 years. I would much rather do something productive then sit around gazing at my navel in some stupid philosophy class.

Comment Re:Cut YouCut (Score 2) 760

That's why we have a representative democracy rather than a pure democracy. The Founding Fathers knew all too well not to trust the reasoning abilities of the "common man"

Many of our states have a mix of the two. It has been a disaster for California but here in Colorado it hasn't been all that bad. In about half the states voters can directly enact legislation by initiative and even more local governments have such processes in place.

Here in Colorado about 5% of voters can sign a petition to initiate a law or amend the state constitution. Voters have enacted a balanced budget amendment, a law requiring voter approval for all tax hikes (known as the Taxpayer Bill of Rights or TABOR), term limits, and a whole host of other legislation. Our state legislature is extremely weak but we still have a functional system of government. I would never want initiatives at the national level, but keeping the common man involved in some way or another is a good idea.

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